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Carpe diem, ( Latin: "pluck the day") phrase used by the Roman poet Horace to express the idea that one should enjoy life while one can.
The phrase carpe diem appears in Horace's Odes (I.11) as part of the injunction "carpe diem quam minimum credula postero," which can be translated as "pluck the day, trusting as little as possible in the next one".
Carpe diem, (Latin: "pluck the day" or "seize the day") phrase used by the Roman poet Horace to express the idea that one should enjoy life while one can.
Carpediem: Latin for "seize the day", literally meaning "pluck the day", which stems from a poem by Horace.
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Inside the gray cases are hundreds of cow eggs -- big, plump and beautifully rotund oocytes, as they're technically known -- each one painstakingly plucked the day before from the ovaries of cows slaughtered in Iowa.
Bow Wow has been lucky enough to realise the dream of leisure at a young age and we should praise him for his courage and for setting a good example to his followers for, as Keynes said: "We shall honour those who can teach us how to pluck the hour and the day virtuously and well".
It arrived in Tristan de Cunha on Friday to pluck the boat from the ocean with a several-hundred-foot-long crane.
Thus we pluck the Bangkong.
"I would pluck the chicken.
Go forth and pluck the Bangkong.
There was a time when those dizzy heights must have seemed quite near, particularly when Monckton was plucked from the Sunday Telegraph magazine to work at Number 10 in 1983.
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